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  • 21 Aug, 2019

  • By, Wikipedia

Gaodeng Island

26°16′25″N 119°59′12″E / 26.27361°N 119.98667°E / 26.27361; 119.98667

Gaodeng Island
Native name:
高登島
Gaodeng Island, as seen from Daqiu Island
Gaodeng in Lienchiang County (the Matsu Islands)
Gaodeng Island is located in East China Sea
Gaodeng Island
Gaodeng Island
Location in the East China Sea
Geography
Locationnorth of Beigan Island, Beigan Township, Lienchiang County (the Matsu Islands), Fujian, Republic of China (Taiwan)
Area1.39 km (0.54 sq mi)
Administration
ProvinceFujian (streamlined)
CountyLienchiang (the Matsu Islands)
Rural TownshipBeigan
Additional information
Time zone

Gaodeng Island (Kaoteng, Kao-teng Tao) (Chinese: 高登; pinyin: Gāodēng Dǎo; Wade–Giles: Kao-têng Tao; Foochow Romanized: Gŏ̤-dĕng-dō̤, also Pei-sha Tao (北沙島), 下目嶼, 下木嶼) is an island in the East China Sea, part of Beigan Township, Lienchiang County (the Matsu Islands), Fujian Province, Republic of China (Taiwan). The island is closed to the public. Gaodeng is located 9.25 kilometres (5.75 mi) away from the Beijiao Peninsula (北茭半岛) in Lianjiang County, Fuzhou, Fujian, China (PRC). The island can be seen from the nearby Beigan Island and Daqiu Island.

History

In 1368, fisherman residents of the nearby Huangqi Peninsula (黃岐半島) moved to and lived on the island.

On February 13, 1951, under cover of fog, eight Chinese Communist motorized junks and more than twenty wooden ships surrounded and attacked the island. After two hours of fighting, the Chinese Communist forces were repelled.

In the early morning of November 20, 1954, ROC soldier Wang Hsi-Tien (汪喜田) was severely injured while capturing a frogman soldier from mainland China who had landed on the island. Communist soldiers who swim to the islands from the mainland are referred to among the soldiers as 'water goblins' (水鬼).

On March 4, 1955 during the First Taiwan Strait Crisis, an assault on Kaoteng Island (Gaodeng) by forty Communist motorized junks was driven off.

On the three days of October 7, 11 and 14, 1955, a total of 49 rounds were fired at Kaoteng (Gaodeng) in Chinese Communist shelling of the island. On October 29, 12 rounds were fired at Gaodeng Island from Fenjishan (糞箕山) on the Beijiao Peninsula. On December 28, Nationalist and Communist forces clashed for an hour in the waters near Gaodeng Island. There were reports of shelling directed at Kaoteng (Gaodeng) later in the year. On February 3, 1956, Gaodeng Island was shelled over 600 times. On February 9, the island was shelled 154 times. On March 19, the island was shelled 119 times and Nationalist forces returned fire, firing thirteen shells. On April 24, the island was shelled 246 times. On May 17, the island was shelled 136 times.

On August 19, 1958, President Chiang Kai-shek visited the island.

On February 6, 1960, Chinese Communists fired 165 shells at the island. Nationalist forces sustained no injuries.

In September/October 1975, frogmen ('water goblins') from mainland China landed on the island twice and left threatening messages in graffiti.

On December 26, 2000, a Chinese fishing boat was spotted 2 kilometres (1.2 mi) from Kaoteng Island (Gaodeng). The Coast Guard fired 16 rounds of ammunition into the air as a warning. Six crew members aboard were arrested on the spot and the ship sank into the sea.

On the morning of September 9, 2005, President Chen Shui-bian visited Gaodeng Island and other nearby islands.

In April 2019, a Beigan-registered fishing boat reported that it was attacked and chased off by numerous Chinese boats in Taiwan-controlled waters between Gaodeng and Zhongdao (中島) on the afternoon of April 17. The next day, a Taiwan (ROC) Coast Guard vessel was pelted with rocks by the crew of a Chinese ship off the coast of the Matsu Islands.

In March 2023, Taiwan Customs levied NT$98.61 million (approximately US$3.2 million) in fines on ship owners and crew found smuggling 58,706 kilograms of live Australian rock lobsters in 33 shipments from Australia to China between September and November 2022 via vessels which would reportedly sail to waters off Gaodeng Island and make transactions with Chinese fishing boats at sea.

Geography

Mountains on the island include Beishan ('north mountain', Mt. Beishan; 北山) which reaches 72 m (236 ft) above sea level and Nanshan ('south mountain', Mt. Nanshan; 南山) which reaches 99 m (325 ft) above sea level. Ports include Nan-ao Port (南澳港), Tiejian Port (鐵尖港) and Dawei Port (大維港).

Gallery

See also